Brighton Rock I began in 1937 as a
detective story and continued, I am sometimes tempted to
think, as an error of judgment The first fifty pages
of Brighton Rock are all that remain of the detective
story; they would irritate me, if I dared to look at them
now, for I know I ought to have had the strength of mind
to remove them, and to start the story againhowever
difficult the revisions might have proved  with
what is now called Part Two.

...the setting of Brighton Rock
may in part belong to an imaginary geographic region.
Though Nelson Place has been cleared away since the war,
and the Brighton race gangs were to all intents quashed
forever as a serious menace at Lewes Assizes a little
before the date of my novel, and even Sherry's dance hall
has vanished, they certainly did exist; there was a real
Nelson Place, and a man was kidnapped on Brighton
front in a broad daylight of the thirties, though not in
the same circumstances as Hale, and his body was found
somewhere out towards the Downs flung from a car.
Colleoni, the gang leader, had his real prototype who had
retired by 1938 and lived a gracious Catholic life in one
of the Brighton crescents, although I found his name was
still law when I demanded entrance by virtue of it to a
little London nightclub called The Nest behind Regent
Street

All the same I must plead guilty to
manufacturing this Brighton of mine as I never
manufactured Mexico or Indochina. There were no living
models for these gangsters, nor for the barmaid who so
obstinately refused to come alive. I had spent only one
night in the company of someone who could have belonged
to Pinkie's ganga man from the Wandsworth
dog-tracks whose face had been carved because he was
suspected of grassing to the bogies after a killing in
the stadium. (He taught me the only professional slang I
knew, but one cannot learn a language in one night
however long.)

...The Pinkies are the real
Peter Pans  doomed to be juvenile for a lifetime.
They have something of a fallen angel about them, a
morality which once belonged to another place. The outlaw
of justice always keeps in his heart the sense of justice
outraged  his crimes have an excuse and
yet he is pursued by the Others. The Others have
committed worse crimes and flourish. The world is full of
Others who wear the masks of Success, of a Happy Family.
Whatever crime he may be driven to commit the child who
doesn't grow up remains the great champion of justice.
"An eye for an eye." "Give them a dose of
their own medicine." As children we have all
suffered punishments for faults we have not committed,
but the wound has soon healed. With Raven and Pinkie the
wound never heals.

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